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First, you should almost always use -t unless you have a really good
reason to not sync timestamps otherwise future rsync runs will not
know what has changed and what hasn't.
Second, when you run with -p rsync should detect and fix any
permission differences. If the permissions are the only difference it
should fix them with a simple change to the permissions just like your
chmod.
Note that -a (--archive) includes both -p and -t and a bunch of other
things.
Finally, when in doubt, --itemize-changes.
On 03/01/12 20:05, Pavel Sanda wrote:> Hi,
>
> is rsync supposed to detect permission change only (if other
> attributes are equal at both source and target)?
>
> I'm able to synchronize permissions by -p when the file changes
> (e.g. its timestamp when -t is used) but otherwise the sole
> permission change of the file (e.g. via chmod u-w file) remains
> unnoticed.
>
> Any hint?
>
> Thanks, Pavel
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Kevin Korb Phone: (407) 252-6853
Systems Administrator Internet:
FutureQuest, Inc. Kevin at FutureQuest.net (work)
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